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INSIDE
This Week
FEATURES ........ 15
Davis brings experience to the Sonoran Arts League
FEATURES ........ 17 Dance Fusion celebrates artform
FEATURES ........ 21 Cars and Coffee drives into High Street
OPINION ................... 12 FEATURES ................ 15 CLASSIFIEDS ............ 22 Zone I
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Serving the communities of Anthem, Desert Hills, Norterra, Sonoran Foothills, Stetson Valley, Tramonto, New River, Desert Ridge and North Phoenix
Anthem Area Edition
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Wednesday, March 23, 2022
Anthem sees improvements to water system BY ALLISON BROWN Foothills Focus Staff Wrier
E
xperts discussed improvements and upcoming projects in the Phoenix Water Services Department as well as Arizona’s water usage and drought mitigation strategies at a March 11 town hall meeting. City of Phoenix Water Services Department Jim Swanson is Phoenix’s assistant director of the water services department and has over 30 years of experience in wastewater operations, regulatory water resources and water management. He explained some of the recent improvements and ongoing projects in and around Anthem are in response to growth in the area. The biggest project has been the installation of a new water main and a new gravi-
ty sewer main. The goal of this project is to connect Anthem to the Phoenix water system. “What we’re currently doing is wielding water through EPCOR,” Swanson said. “We will deliver water to the EPCOR campus … and we’ll put our water into EPCOR storage tanks. Then, they will pump it up their water lines, it goes into a booster station and then we pump it to serve the houses up here. The long term plan is to use that system as a backup, and we will provide water directly to Anthem homeowners on the west side of I-17.” The installation of the new water main was completed in Fall 2021, though it is not in use yet. Swanson said this was no easy project, as the lines were 24 and 36 inches and sizable trenches had to be dug to install it. A new gravity sewer main line was also
installed in 2021 and Swanson said it is already working today. “Then, in roughly late summer, we will have our booster station fully operational,” he added. “So what that will do is it will be able to take all of the extra water that’s coming up this new main and we’ll be able to take it and then deliver it to the customers in West Anthem. Once that happens, we will no longer wield our water through EPCOR’s water treatment plant and then up and over, we will actually take our water directly.” In addition, the booster station has granular activated carbon in the tanks. According to Swanson, GAC works to remove some of the taste and odor issues, as well as solids, in the water. He said this is an advantage that is not commonly seen at booster sites. Swanson said the goal is to have that com-
fiscal and business services, said the Classroom Site Fund is generated from sales tax revenue. In 2021, the joint legislative budget committee realized it needed to make a projection adjustment, which ended up adding extra money to the fund. “It was only going to be one-time funding, so we didn’t want to attach that to our teachers’ salaries, because there was no guaran-
tee that the revenue would be sustained over time,” Migliorino said. “When the classroom site fund had a projection adjustment, we did the calculation for how much that would be per teacher.” The money was divided by the number of teachers, and a one-time payment was made
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New DV teachers given bonus payment
BY ALLISON BROWN Foothills Focus Staff Writer
M
ore than 200 new teachers in the Deer Valley Unified School District received a one-time extra payment of $1,810 from a surplus in the Classroom Site Fund on March 3. Jim Migliorino, deputy superintendent of
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NEWS
An edition of the East Valley Tribune The Foothills Focus is published every Wednesday and distributed free of charge to homes and in single-copy locations throughout the North Valley. To find out where you can pick up a copy of The Foothills Focus, please visit www.thefoothillsfocus.com CONTACT INFORMATION Main number: 623-465-5808 | Fax: 623-465-1363 Circulation: 480-898-5641 Publisher: Steve T. Strickbine Vice President: Michael Hiatt ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT Display Advertising: 480-348-0343 Classifieds/Inside Sales: Elaine Cota | 480-898-7926 | ecota@timespublications.com TJ Higgins | 480-898-5902 | tjhiggins@timespublications.com Steve Insalaco | 480-898-5635 | sinsalaco@timespublications.com Advertising Office Manager: Tricia Simpson | 480-898-5624 | tsimpson@timespublications.com Director of National Advertising Zac Reynolds | 480-898-5603 | zac@thefoothillsfocus.com NEWS DEPARTMENT Executive Editor: Christina Fuoco-Karasinski | 480-898-5631 christina@timespublications.com Design: Nathalie Proulx | nproulx@timespublications.com Production Coordinator: Courtney Oldham | 480-898-5617 production@timespublications.com Circulation Director: Aaron Kolodny | 480-898-5641 | customercare@evtrib.com
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TEACHERS from page 1
to continuing teachers in December 2021. However, there were less teachers paid than anticipated, as many left or retired. This difference resulted in leftover money, which the board approved to pay the new teachers. “We had so much attrition, just with the pandemic and people that were eligible to retire, that it caused there to be some unallocated funds,” Migliorino explained. “So, we ended up with more money in this one-time projection adjustment fund and the teacher’s association said, ‘Hey, we want to make sure the teachers who are new to the profession can receive this payment,’ because they were not included in the original plan.” The DVUSD Governing Board unanimously approved the decision at a Feb. 22 meeting. Teachers who were hired after April 30, 2021, received the one-time payment of $1,810 on March 3. Migliori-
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that there could be a future payment. “There may be some additional projection adjustments in the estimate; that has happened on a couple of occasions,” he explained. “There is a possibility, because the sales tax revenue has been so robust and the economy is growing in Arizona. So, there’s a chance that there might be some additional one-time money in the estimate that we get.” Migliorino said although it was a relatively small payment, it’s the least the district can do to give back to teachers for everything they have been doing the past few years. He said he hopes outsiders see the effort they are making. “Not everybody follows the board meetings, so it’s always nice to let our community know that we’re trying to do the most that we can for our employees, because they are really going above and beyond during some very challenging times and it’s nice to be able to reward them with things like this.”
drawers and garages. Items collected will be recycled or donated to local nonprofits. Items to recycle, repurpose and donate can range from electronics, old magazines, bicycles, sporting equipment, office supplies, gently used household items and toys, and document shredding. Nonperishable food, hygiene products and used clothing will also be accepted for Nourish Phoenix Food and Clothing Bank. “After a two-year absence due to COVID, we are so thrilled to be bring I Recycle PHX back to the North Phoenix area” said Tom Waldeck, president and chief executive officer of Keep Phoenix Beautiful. “And since more than half of what we throw away can be recycled, this is a wonderful way to keep our city clean, green and sustainable.” The event is free and open to the public. “Everyone is welcome to drop off items,” Waldeck said. “The more we take in, the more we keep out of the
landfills.” Books, toys, gently used adult bicycles, sporting equipment, clothing, art supplies will be donated to local nonprofits, such as Treasures 4 Teachers and Bike Saviours Bicycle Collective. Electronics and old cellphones will be accepted by Westech Recyclers and residents can bring documents to be shredded by Security Document Destruction. Up to five banker boxes of documents will be shred for free. Items that will not be accepted include CRT televisions and monitors, single-use batteries, fluorescent tubes and light bulbs. Household hazardous waste items such as paint, tires and chemicals will also not be accepted.
Recycling festival returns to Happy Valley BY FOOTHILLS FOCUS STAFF
K
eep Phoenix Beautiful is bringing its “I Recycle PHX” festival back to Happy Valley Towne Center on Saturday, March 26. Through its partnerships with the city of Phoenix’s Public Works Department and other local organizations, KPB will accept items taking up space in homes, offices, closets,
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no said the HR department received a couple thank-you emails for teachers who received the payment. Migliorino clarified that the funds were not signing bonuses for new teachers, but more like a “deferred salary increase.” He said that by IRS standards, the money is considered wages. Therefore, the district had no say in how the money was spent and the teachers can use it at their discretion. The Classroom Site Fund is restricted, meaning that it is dedicated to teachers. Migliorino said the teachers association could have asked the board not to give the money to the new teachers and held it for themselves, but instead vouched for their colleagues. The joint legislative budget committee is required to give the district leaders the allocation for the upcoming school year by March 30. Migliorino said that while it’s almost impossible to create a firm forecast these days, it is possible
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NEWS
WATER from page 1
pletely up and running by the end of the summer. West Anthem isn’t the only one getting improvements, though. Swanson said another booster pump station will be constructed to serve the new Sendero Crossing residential development being built. He said construction will likely start this year and is projected to be complete in late 2023. “Additionally, this booster pump station could be expanded in the future,” Swanson added. “As this area develops, this booster pump station would, in the future, be expanded to not only serve Sendero, but also new developments.” He said the water services department is also keeping an eye on future developments to ensure everyone in the area receives quality water services. EPCOR Water Doug Dunham, water resources manager for EPCOR Water USA, has many years of experience in water resource management and environmental man-
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agement, including 20 years with the Arizona Department of Water Resources. EPCOR is the Southwest’s largest privacy utility, serving more than 780,000 people in Arizona, New Mexico and Texas. According to Dunham, the company sells 78 million gallons of water each day. “I often get asked, ‘How much water do we have? How much population can we support?’ And I always shock people by saying I don’t know,” Dunham said. “One reason is that, today, we actually use less water than we did in 1957. … our population has grown nearly 600%, our gross economic output is over 2,000% and yet, we use about 1% less water than we did in 1957.” A contributing factor to this change in water usage was the Groundwater Management Act passed in 1980. It created the Arizona Department of Water Resources to help control groundwater depletion, provide means for allocating limited groundwater resources, develop additional water supplies and preserve groundwater for use in a drought. “One of the key elements of this is the
assured water supply program. We’re the only state in the union that has this type of program,” Dunham said. “It requires a 100-year renewable water supply to be demonstrated for new subdivisions. That has to be shown before the subdivision can be created, before the plat can be recorded and before any block can be sold.” There is also the underground storage recovery program, which allows for the storage of renewable water supplies for later recovery, such as in a drought. There is enough water saved to serve the demands of Phoenix for 30 years. In fact, EPCOR has a little over 12,580-acre feet of water stored for emergency backup available for use in Anthem. The Colorado River is under a tier one shortage, which reduces Arizona’s portion of allocated water. Even besides that, Dunham said it became clear that advanced planning had to be done to ensure water was available later. “We saw that the potential for shortages coming down the road were at a much higher percentage than had historically been observed,” he said.
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Confronted with this reality, Arizona, Nevada and California (the three lower basin states of the Colorado River) entered into the Basin Drought Contingency Plan about two years ago. The goal was to take early cuts in water allocations to save water in Lake Mead, where elevation levels trigger declarations of shortages by the Bureau of Reclamation. Dunham said the agreement has been a success. “With the combination of efforts between the states, Bureau of Reclamation, the various Indian tribes that are participating as well as the environmental nongovernmental entities, it has saved and provided an additional elevation of nearly 20 feet in the total volume of Lake Mead,” he said. “So, it has really pushed off a lot of the severe shortages that we would have suffered from if we continued operating as normal.” EPCOR has many programs that it is actively applying to its systems to help offset the drought. One of those is maximizing the use of reclaimed water, which
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Heritage park participating in Arizona Gives Day BY CHRISTINA FUOCO-KARASINSKI Foothills Focus Executive Editor
T
he Black Canyon Heritage Park is participating in the statewide Arizona Gives Day from noon Tuesday, April 5, to noon Wednesday, April 6. The riparian preserve attracts more than 116 bird species and is designated as a Monarch Butterfly Waystation. To participate, visit azgives.org/BCHeritagePark. The Black Canyon Heritage Park is one of the nearly 1,000 nonprofits expected to participate in Arizona Gives Day, an online fundraising initiative that brings together Arizonans from across the state to raise awareness and financial support for a variety of nonprofit organizations. Since it began in 2013, it has raised over $30 million. Last year, the event raised $7.1 million for 982 nonprofits. “This event will give us a statewide
The riparian preserve attracts more than 116 bird species including the Vermillion Flycatcher. (Photo by Cory Shaw)
Queen butterflies likes flowers located at Black Canyon Heritage Park which is a Monarch Butterfly Waystation. (Submitted photo)
opportunity to attract supporters to help us continue our improvement and maintenance programs for our Sonoran Desert riparian preserve that provides with experiences that instill respect, responsibility, and stewardship for the surrounding area,” said Bob Cothern, chair, Black Canyon Heritage Park Coalition.
WATER from page 6
The local community helps to maintain the butterfly garden. (Submitted photo)
is done either through storage or directly for landscape use. Dunham said this is one way to ensure as much groundwater as possible is left where it can be available later in the case of drought. It is also continuing with conservation programs, ensuring backup supplies are available and upgrading the well infrastructure to be used if needed. According to Dunham, EPCOR also provides programs to help customers
with their conservation efforts, such as self-audit kits and leak detection assistance. It also participates in community gardens and offers conservation classes taught at Anthem schools and at the community center. The next community town hall meeting will be held via Zoom at 9 a.m. Friday, April 8, with speakers from the Maricopa County and Arizona Department of Transportation. For more information, visit daisymountain.org/representativetownhall.html
NEWS
THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | MARCH 23, 2022
Statewide distracted driving/ riding event planned BY FOOTHILLS FOCUS STAFF
P
eoria-based Arizona Motorcycle Safety and Awareness Foundation will showcase “Share the Road & Riding for the Long Haul” at Phoenix Shrine Auditorium and Event Center at 552 N. 40th Street in Phoenix. Set for 5:30 to 9:30 p.m. Saturday, May 7, the event features a dinner adventure and fundraiser with 1950s characters, guest speakers, live and silent auctions, mega raffles, door prizes, visual entertainment and music, to focus the public on the critical need to reduce distracted driving and help eliminate crashes and fatalities. The evening’s entertainment theme is bebop. “This great annual event should be important to every individual who rides or drive on our roads, and to Arizona companies and organizations that need to step up and help make change for the safety and well-being of their employees,” said Mick Degn, executive
director for AMSAF. “In Arizona, crashes and fatalities are a huge concern.” Law Tigers Motorcycle Lawyers and Dignity Health, Chandler Regional Medical Center, serve as supporting sponsors. The Arizona Governor’s Office of Highway Safety is the focal point for highway safety issues in Arizona. GOHS provides leadership by developing, promoting and coordinating programs; influencing public and private policy; and increasing public awareness of highway safety; www.azgohs.gov. The Governor’s Office of Highway Safety has supported AMSAF through multiple grants to help promote safety and awareness. There are more than 210,000 registered motorcycles in Arizona and the numbers continue to grow. According to GOHS, the number of motorcycle and distracted driver crashes and fatalities has increased, resulting in the Share the Road effort. For more information and tickets, visit AMSAF amsaf.org/RFTLH.
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THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | MARCH 23, 2022
Scottsdale’s Valerie Thompson appearing at museum BY FOOTHILLS FOCUS STAFF
T
he “world’s fastest female racer,” Scottsdale’s Valerie Thompson, will headline “Fast & Fabulous” at the Cave Creek Museum from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday, April 2. Thompson is the 10x land speed record holder with membership in the Sturgis Hall of Fame as well as eight 300 MPH clubs and one 300 MPH club. She consistently is ranked as one of the world’s top 10 fastest motorcycle racers. Racing the BUB 7 motorcycle streamliner during the 2028 Dry Lake Racers Australia (DLRA) Speed Week competition at Lake Gairdner, she set a new speed record off 32.8467 miles per hour to become Australia’s fastest female streamliner motorcycle racer. Days later, she experienced a horrific crash at more than 360 miles per hour during the World Speed Trails.
“Fast and Fabulous” will be held at Cave Creek Museum from 2 to 4 p.m. on Saturday, April 2 featuring Scottsdale’s Valerie Thompson, a 10-time land speed record holder. (Submitted photo)
Thompson walked away from the catastrophe that scattered wreckage for more than a mile. Thompson has a busy 2022 as the designated rider for two motorcycle teams in addition to attempting new records on four wheels piloting the dual-engine Target 550 Streamliner owned by land speed racing legend Marlo Treit. She began playing pickleball in February 2021 and fell in love with the sport. The new fitness regime led to playing several times a week, attending pickleball camps and taking professional lessons. Thompson’s pickleball passion has generated media interest resulting in cover and feature stories in USA Pickleball and front-page news in the Wendover Times after a spirited game with city’s mayor at Bonneville Salt Flats. For more information, call 480488-2764.
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THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | MARCH 23, 2022
$4K offered for Arizona art students BY FOOTHILLS FOCUS STAFF
O
utstanding arts high school seniors going on to college in the visual arts can apply for scholarships offered by the nonprofit Sonoran Arts League. The league’s Visual Arts Scholarship is for students who have excelled in the visual arts field and who have enrolled in higher education and plan to continue their artistic studies. A total of $4,000 will be awarded in 2022. “We are excited to offer these scholarships once again to support Arizona students pursuing an art career,” said Sonoran Arts League Executive Director Warren Davis. “We know there are many deserving young artists across Arizona who are eligible for this award and welcome their application for this scholarship.”
Applicants must be a graduating high school senior with a G.P.A. of 2.5 or better and be a legal resident of the state of Arizona. Those interested must be planning to enroll in a university, college, community college or school of design either full time or part time and must register for one visual arts class their freshman year. Selections will be made by a blind jury process by professional artists from the league. Online applications are now open for submission at sonoranartsleague.org, by clicking on Art Education. A downloadable file is available with all the information. The deadline is Wednesday, April 13. Notifications will be emailed the week of April 21. For more information, email scholarship@sonoranartsleague.org or call 480-575-6624 for details.
Alyssa Tate, graduate of Cactus Shadows High School, is attending the Chicago Institute of Arts after receiving a Sonoran Arts League scholarship as well as the Bronze Bell award as a memorial to Jeff Cross. With her is Deborah Wales, recently retired Cactus Shadows art teacher. (Photo courtesy of the Sonoran Arts League)
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AROUND THE BLUHMIN’ TOWN
Nation budget is mind boggling BY JUDY BLUHM Foothills Focus Columnist
B
rother, can you spare a dime? Actually, $30 trillion might help. The national debt boggles the mind and is causing panic in the hearts of citizens throughout the land. It seems our government has been printing and spending lots of money. And yes, both political parties seem to enjoy this folly. One day, we might have to “face the music” and the tune doesn’t sound real pretty. And just because we
are “in the red,” doesn’t mean we still can’t spend the green. If we use last year’s national budget as an indicator of how money can be wasted, read on. Did you know that $15,600 had been set aside just for waffle irons for the Congressional dining room? Put me in charge of acquisitions and I’ll go to the local thrift store and pick up a few used waffle irons that may cost $20. Better yet, why not serve pancakes to all those politicians? There may be less “waffling” on issues. Dear readers, can we really trust the
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mental giants who are running this country if they have to eat waffles in the morning? That’s not even grownup food! Why does it cost $135,350 for brass polish for the Marine Corps Band that serves the White House? I am not making this up. Little did we know that polish is part of the defense budget. We all recognize the importance of shiny trumpets and trombones, but I think a cheap solution of baking powder could do the trick. Who would have guessed that our “top brass” would have to spend so much, when a little spit and a soft cloth is all that’s required? I think the aroma of one big pork roast is coming out of the budget report. There are all sorts of stupid (oops, I mean interesting) projects that our government likes supporting. Hey, we’re all paying for this “pork-fest,” so maybe we need to ask questions. Like why is $9 million being spent to study alcohol consumption on college campuses. I have a better idea, let’s just watch TikTok for a few days during spring break and (for free) we might see everything we’ve ever wanted to know. Someone suggested that we spend
$100 million for the psychiatrists who need to check out our politicians who think frivolous spending is helpful and send each member of Congress to a class on “basic accounting.” There’s a deficit alright, and it’s in the brains of some of our leaders who think they can spend on crazy items. Sadly, the “pork-fest” is nothing new. I want to get a job for our government. I may not have any experience in spending billions, but I do like to shop. Hey, what’s an average taxpayer to do? Put a few pork chops in the oven and have a big glass of wine (maybe a bottle of Pepto Bismol). Oh, did I mention that there’s a little cash (just a few million) that has been allocated to study the sex habits of scorpions and the effects of alcohol on bees? Sounds like a “sting operation” to me. Judy Bluhm is a writer and a local Realtor. Have a story or a comment? Contact Judy at judy@judybluhm.com.
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OPINION
THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | MARCH 23, 2022
Didja hear? It’s the ‘year of living dangerously’
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BY J.D. HAYWORTH Foothills Focus Columnist
C
omedian Robert Klein offers a lament-for-laughs, regretting that life does not come with an audible soundtrack. He jokes that we would be spared mistakes, mishaps and maybe even an “apocalyptic occurrence” (gasp!) if only we could hear foreboding music to warn us. You can be forgiven if current events have your “internal speakers” blaring a certain song. Based on the tenor and tone of developments over recent months, perhaps you’ve been hearing an “age-appropriate” tune-of-doom in your own mind. Based on a very limited survey conducted exclusively for this column, it seems that “Star Trek” enthusiasts of the baby boomer generation hear the threatening “BAHHM-bum-bum-bumbum-buh-BAHHM” that would inevitably usher the audience into a commercial break as Capt. Kirk and crew confronted the latest peril unfolding in the plot of that episode. Curiously, the melodic “theme-of-undoing” for the American left enjoys a wide-but-weird appeal across all demographic groups who share that political ideology, even though it permeated the collective consciousness of our culture in the monochromatic mid-20th century. It’s the “Dragnet” theme, with those unmistakably ominous opening notes, now updated with a one-word lyric: “TRUMP-Trump-Trump-Trump! TRUMPTrump-Trump-Trump-TRUMP!” And, just as Jack Webb revised and reintroduced “Dragnet” in living color for NBC in the late sixties, so, too, does the left fear that Donald Trump will return as a “21st Century Grover Cleveland…” only this time as a Republican, employing a makeup artist who was trained using the “golden tan” pancake, so prevalent in the colorful productions emanating from “Beautiful Downtown Bur-
bank” decades ago. The memory of “Mister Rogers,” on loan from his estate and PBS, courtesy of the generosity of taxpayers (and perhaps “viewers like you”) might put it this way: “Can you say 45th and 47th presidents of the United States? Sure you can! No worries for you, King Friday…After all, you rule the ‘Neighborhood of Make Believe!’ But for our friends’ parents and their Volvo-driving pals, this is all-tooreal!” Of course, on the other side of the political street, the current occupant of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue prompts fears that are also all-too-real — not to mention contemporaneous. Conservatives are often accused of a desire to “turn the clock back,” but based on the current calamitous atmosphere in the USA, who can blame them? With war raging in Europe, runaway inflation here at home, and our southern border still wide open as an “invitation for invasion,” what’s a right-winger to do? You guessed it: “Turn back the clock,” but with a high-tech twist. Since late night network television has abandoned any pretense of even-handed political humor—must as their news divisions have deserted any efforts at ob-
see HAYWORTH page 14
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OPINION
THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | MARCH 23, 2022
849 Arizona taxpayers had a curious impulse BY DAVID LEIBOWITZ Foothills Focus Columnist
S
omewhere in this sprawling state of ours, there are precisely 849 people that I would like to meet. I’ll buy a cup of coffee, a beer, lunch, steak dinner for two. Whatever it takes to have one of these 849 individuals sit down with me for a few minutes, the length of a simple conversation. Those of you who understand text messaging shorthand will appreciate the single question I intend to use as an icebreaker. WTF? Some circumstances in life require such a blunt approach, because they are so stupefying, so insane, they defy all logic. Truth be told, while I do not condone murder, there are circumstances where I understand what the murderer was thinking. But these 849 Arizonans? I haven’t a clue.
Each year on our Arizona tax returns, a number of boxes appear that allow taxpayers to make voluntary gifts. You can donate to the Special Olympics, to prevent child abuse, to support veterans in need. Then there’s the box that 849 people checked last year, making voluntary donations that totaled $25,735. That would be the state revenuers’ I Did Not Pay Enough taxes fund. I want to know – no, I need to know – what these 849 people were thinking? All day, I’ve tried to imagine Joe and Jane Arizona at the kitchen table, tax documents spread out, sweating over their state 140A form. Joe: “Dammit, looks like we’ve got a refund coming to us again. How do you want to handle that?” Jane: “I guess we could take the grandkids to Outback. They love that Bloomin’ Onion.” Joe: “Oh, hey, here’s an idea. The state government only collected $24 billion
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in tax revenue last year. Let’s give it to them!” Jane: “Now that’s good thinking, sweets. Either that or we can donate it to Jeff Bezos. Maybe he can buy more scalp.” These 849 neighbors of ours represent a record number of donors to the I Did Not Pay Enough fund, established in 2010 by that noted band of deep thinkers, the Arizona Legislature. According to a recent story in the Phoenix Business Journal, the fund has collected about $185,000 total – or about $185,000 more than anyone would have predicted. Look, I understand that Arizona is a relatively low-tax state, especially compared to California, which taxes top earners at more than 13% of annual income versus Arizona’s top rate of 4.5%. But gifting the government more money? Voluntarily? I don’t get it, especially when you consider that we collectively paid $14.2 billion in state sales tax last year and another $8.3 billion in state income tax. And that was before recreational marijuana taxes really ramped up – $116 million contributed to the state in six months last year – and before the legalization of sports betting statewide in September 2021. Toss in a few billion extra dollars from the feds in COVID-19 relief funds, and the state is looking Bezos-style wealthy,
even as inflation bites residents hard. To my way of thinking, checking the I Didn’t Pay Enough box is like seeing a family of homeless people in need seeking donations at a stoplight, reaching into your pocket and handing a few crumpled singles to the guy in the Porsche next to you. He was doing just fine, thanks. At least one of these 849 people should sit for an interview to explain their thought process, and I want to be the guy. Then again, maybe a free meal isn’t much of an inducement to these folks. How about we go out to eat, we chat, and you pay the check? Since all 849 of you clearly have more money than you know what to do with.
jective journalism — conservatives will come up with their own internet video parodies, provided they likewise find “safe” media platforms, untouched by the freedom-killing coma of “wokeness.” Rumor has it that an ambitious creative offering is “in development,” led by a couple of logical candidates. They wish to remain unnamed, pointing out that they are now grandfathers who earned their comic chops in the that’s-not-funny-that’s-gross heyday of “National Lampoon.” With a proposed theme song set to the tune of “Petticoat Junction,” get ready for “District of Corruption!”
“Come ride the Amtrak Train that is heavily subsidized… to the district… “It’s a real short ride, but expensive just the same… in the district… “Lotsa deals you bet…more big bucks than you ever thought you’d get…in the district! “District of Corruption! There’s a big White House on P-A Avenue in the district…in reality it’s run by a leftist few in the district… And there’s confused ol’ Joe…still hopin’ he can make more dough in the district…District of Corruption!” So, why the burst of “conservative creativity” amid all the doom and gloom? Simple. You gotta laugh to keep from crying.
HAYWORTH from Page 13
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Davis brings experience to the Sonoran Arts League BY LAURA LATZKO Foothills Focus Contributing Writer
W
ith a legacy of arts organizations and companies behind him, Warren M. Davis is hoping to make his mark as Sonoran Arts League executive director. In January, Davis was handed the reins after executive director Cait Huble stepped down to move with her husband to New Mexico. Davis said he believes he is a good fit based on his background. His re-
sume includes stints with the Joffrey Ballet, Lyric Opera of Chicago, University of Chicago’s Smart Museum of Art, Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, Art Institute of Chicago and Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago. Davis has over 20 years of experience working with nonprofits and arts organizations in fundraising, board governance, external relations and volunteer management. The nonprofit Sonoran Arts League is dedicated to the advancement of the arts and arts education. The Cave Creek-based organization is home to
more than 700 member artists. “I think what was appealing to the board was the diversity of my background and abilities, especially given that it’s a small nonprofit,” said Davis, who recently ran Warren Davis Consulting LLC. “You have to be a jack-of-all-trades. Given my background, especially in the last five years of being on my own for my own company, it helped me to develop the skills needed.” Warren Davis Consulting LLC worked with collectives like Ballet Arizona and ArtWins. Although Davis enjoyed his consulting business, he was ready for a
change. “It was a strong desire of wanting to get directly back in,” he said. “Even as a consultant and having multiple clients in the nonprofit sector and in the arts, it wasn’t the same as being there and being ever-present for it. So, I missed that involvement in it.” Animal lover Along with the arts, Davis is passionate about animal welfare. Through his consulting firm, he worked with Pawsitive Friendships,
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Warren Davis brings to the Sonoran Arts League a well-rounded career in the arts. (Photo courtesy of Warren Davis)
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DAVIS ���� ���� 15
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which helps special needs children through animal therapy. Davis owns two black labs, both of whom were runts. He called Tannie, 12, the “smart one,” while 3-yearold Buddy is “not as intelligent, but equally loveable.” A Deer Valley High School graduate, Davis grew up at 32nd Street and Shea Boulevard, and lived at 43rd Avenue and Bell Road. His mother was an interior designer and his first art teacher. She fostered a love of arts in him and encouraged him to take art and theater classes. Davis earned a bachelor’s degree in art history and theater from ASU and went to get a master’s degree in liberal studies, with an art history thesis, from DePaul University in Chicago. “I have worked in every major arts discipline that there is in the nonprofit sector,” Davis said. “That’s very much a conscious choice I made of having a well-rounded vision of the arts, how they functioned, what they did and how they operated.” Pandemic recovery In three months, Davis has helped the Sonoran Arts League build its new website and recover from the COVID-19 pandemic. Davis said, like other arts organizations, the Sonoran Arts League is forced to be fiscally conservative as it grows. With the 11-member board, Davis will plan the league’s direction for the next three years.
“When you used to do a strategic plan, you would do as many as five years out,” Davis said. “I don’t think any organization can do that now. You can change dramatically in the course of a year. We’ve seen that the last few years.” Davis said before he started in his new role, the Sonoran Arts League’s board had a sense of the direction. Davis will guide them and implement ideas in a way that works for the organization. “They had a general sense of what they wanted to do and certainly no shortage of vision of what they wanted to be and accomplish,” he said. “It’s a matter of harnessing that creativity and that energy and getting everyone to move into that direction.” Known for Hidden in the Hills Studio Tour, the Sonoran Arts League recently unveiled its Arts Learning Center inside its complex at Cave Creek’s Stagecoach Village. The learning center will host a variety of classes. The league will expand its arts education programs this year. For children, the league will offer an expanded six weeks of arts camps. “While we are most known for working in the visual arts at the Sonoran Arts League, our mission is very much centered around the arts as a broad category, not just visual arts,” Davis said. “Certainly, that’s our core of what we do, and we will always remain that way, but we can have a broader reach in the arts community.”
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Dance Fusion celebrates the artform BY CHRISTINA FUOCO-KARASINSKI Foothills Focus Executive Editor
D
r. Linda Simon grew up watching musicals starring Gene Kelly, Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. “My parents were huge dance and musical theater fans,” she said. “Growing up in New York City, we would go to Broadway shows three to five times a year.” Simon was inspired by her mother who saved every Playbill from the Broadway shows she attended in the 1950s. Simon’s love of her mother and musicals is reflected in Dance Fusion, a Scottsdale dance, fitness and yoga studio for adults, at 7601 E. Gray Road, Suite B-C. “I took 25 of the best Playbills and made a collage back in my studio,” she said. Simon does not have formal dance
Dr. Linda Simon created Dance Fusion, a Scottsdale dance, fitness and yoga studio for adults located at 7601 E. Gray Road, Suite B-C by renovating the studio from an old karate dojo to its current state. (Submitted photo) training but took jazz and tap classes with Fred Kelly at Pace University in New York City. Starting college at age 16, Simon is a chiropractor in Scottsdale. So, to run Dance Fusion smooth-
ly, she hired the best in the business for Dance Fusion. “I found a dance studio eight years ago that had adult classes,” she said. “I went for a year and the studio closed.
People were heartbroken when the studio closed. I didn’t want to let this go. So, within 90 days, Dance Fusion was created.” When Simon renovated the studio, an old karate dojo, she was touched by the outpouring of support. More than $18,000 worth of wood was donated to her. “It was a miracle, miracle of miracles that helped us get this place together,” she said. “Dancers are a very loving community. I’ve never seen anything like this. Dance Fusion has been a labor of love since the very beginning. “Other studios shuttered, so people relocated to attend Dance Fusion. That’s how we’ve expanded. It’s been phenomenal. It’s been like a miracle. We have this great artwork in the studio. It’s all about love and joy. That’s
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what dance is — love and joy.” Dance Fusion Teen Division/Dance Fusion Youth Academy is a noncompetitive developmental dance program for teens and youth. It takes a different approach. “Most of the dance studios have a similar business model, where the kids come in really, really hungry and they pick the ones who are dancers and get them into competitive programs,” she said. “The kids are competing every single year. With the competition schedules, there’s no time to dance during the summer.” Teachers and students told Simon that that rigorous program is stressful. “The studio started as adults only,” she added. “We do have the youth students.” Upcoming show Dance Fusion Studios is hosting “Dance Dance Fusion Revolution”
Shadows High School. The two-hour family-friendly performance showcases more than 70 adult, teen and youth performers in dance, music and musical theater, featuring local talent and internationally acclaimed performers and choreographers. Performers from other studios will also hit the stage. Also featured are vendors, raffles, prizes, discounts on Dance Fusion class packages and memberships. “Dance Dance Fusion Revolution” celebrates the love of dance and video games. It will feature numbers in ballet, tap, jazz, musical theater, hip-hop, Bollywood, gypsy Dance Fusion started as an adults only studio later imple- folk, Indian classical, belly menting a less rigorous youth program compared to other dance, contemporary and studios. (Submitted photo) lyrical. “This is a jam-packed dance festival and celebration of the show,” Simon said. “We have 36 rouarts on Sunday, April 3, at Cactus tines. We’re also going to livestream it
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so families on the east coast can tune in, and grandmothers and grandparents can watch their grandchildren dance if they want to. The showcase brings everybody together—other outside groups, different dance studios that have relationships with the academy.” The show will serve as an outreach to the greater dance community, she said. The lobby will have vendors selling items like dancewear and jewelry. “It’s a really fun environment,” she said. “It’s a blast. Everybody who comes to the show gives such amazing feedback.”
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THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | MARCH 23, 2022
Transactional living or transformational living? CHURCH COMMUNITY CONNECTION
Pastor Ed Delph Foothills Focus Columnist
O
ne of my favorite authors is Laurie Beth Jones. In her book entitled, “Teach Your Team to Fish,” she talks about the difference between a transaction and a transformation. Let’s glean from Laurie on this crucial subject that can make a difference in our lives. “Transactions are lateral exchanges between people-be it goods or services. Transactions occur every time two people engage in commerce of any kind. I give you this in exchange for that. Transactions are obvious and lateral, commonplace, and easy to spot. In contrast, transformations are invisible, uplifting, transcendent experiences that involve a fundamental shift or change.”
In other words, when you go to the grocery store, a transaction occurs when they give you groceries, and you give them money. You go out the same way you came in. Transactions are necessary but not necessarily transformational. Most people are looking for transformations rather than transactions. The person who buys drugs is looking for a transformation, but they get a transaction. After the buzz, they are, at best, still the same. Jones says, “Women are looking for transformations when they buy mascara or makeup. They want to move from feeling plain to feeling beautiful. But the transformation does not take place by adding new clothes to paper dolls. Transformation is truly an inside job.” She is correct. Here is an example of the difference between a transaction and a transformation. One weekend, an old farmer went to the city and attended the big-city church. He came home, and his wife asked him how it was. “Well, it was good,” said the farmer.
“However, they did something different.” They sang praise choruses instead of hymns. “What are praise choruses?” the wife asked. “What are praise choruses like?” The farmer responded, “They’re like hymns, only different. Well, it’s like this. If I were to say to you, ‘Martha, the cows are in the corn,’ that would be a hymn. If, on the other hand, I were to say to you, ‘Martha, Martha, Martha, Oh MARTHA, MARTHA, MARTHA — the cows, the big cows, the brown cows, the black cows, the white cows, the black and white cows, the COWS, COWS, COWS, are in the corn, are in the corn, are in the corn…are…in…the …corn…. THE CORN!!!’ Well, now that would be a praise chorus.” That’s not a slam on hymns. That’s what happens when songs come from the inside rather than outside of a person. Churches, businesses, organizations, governments and schools who discover the paradigm of transformation will be leaders in their fields in today’s transformation-starved world. The Scriptures share an encounter with Jesus and a woman at a well. The woman had come to the well for a simple transaction — getting water in her bucket. Jesus turned this simple exchange into a transformational experience for her. “A woman of Samaria came to draw water. Jesus, being weary from his journey, said to her, ‘Give me a drink,’ for his disciples had gone away into the city to buy food.” Then the woman of Samaria said to him, “How is that you, being a religious man, ask for a drink from me, a woman?” Jesus answered and said to her, “If you knew the gift of God, and who it is who says to you, ‘give me a drink,’ you would have asked him, and he would have given you living water.” After a few more rounds of discussion, the woman went into the city and said to the men, “Come, see a man who told me everything I did. Then they went out of the city and came to him.” Essentially, she said, “Men, come see a real man!” That’s still true today. Laurie summarizes the transformation concept for us. “In this quiet exchange, which could have lasted only a few min-
utes, the woman received several transformations: 1) A new self-image, from an undesirable outsider to an insider. 2) From a lowly woman not to be addressed to an equal associate worthy of lengthy attention. 3) From an outcast to a newly forgiven team member whose heart was truly known. 4) From someone who was bound to dust to someone with a new destiny. A shy woman, head down, seeking water, was transformed into an emboldened champion, urging everyone she knew to look up and see a fundamental transformation that was about to occur. Jesus’ team witnessed the effect of this transformation. It was one of many they were to see. In fact, Jesus recruited the first of his team members by promising them transformations, not transactions. “Follow me, and I will make you fishers of men.” It was such a powerful one that they gave up the only work they had ever known to begin work they’d never imagined.” Whether it was 5,000 people listening to Him on a mountainside, a mother-in-law with a fever, or 12 frustrated disciples looking for purpose, Jesus turned boring transactions into life elevating transformations. Jesus taught transformations, not transactions. Jesus makes the transformers in that movie look like beginners. Successful teams, leaders, and everyday people are those that understand the desired product is transformation, not mere transactions. Next week, I’ll share some transformational examples you can apply to make your life more “transformational.” By the way, here’s a question for you. Can an egg fly? Yes, after it’s transformed. Ed Delph is a noted author of 10 books, as well as a pastor, teacher, former business owner and speaker. Ed has traveled extensively, having been to more than 100 countries. He is president of NationStrategy, a nonpro�it organization involved in uplifting and transforming communities worldwide. For more information, see nationstrategy.com. Ed may be contacted at nationstrategy@cs.com.
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Cars and Coffee drives into High Street H O M E
BY ANNIKA TOMLIN Foothills Focus Staff Writer
H
ighline Autos is set to host its free monthly Cars and Coffee at High Street event on Saturday, April 2. Set for 7:30 to 10 a.m. the first Saturday of each month, Cars and Coffee brings in 7,000 to 10,000 attendees, according to Brian Graff, Highline Autos president. “It consists of everything from multimillion-dollar super or hyper cars to classic cars to JDM (Japanese domestic cars) and luxury cars,” he said. The vehicles are hand selected with a limited number of slots available to showcase at the event “To have a car entered into the show, you do need to email us ahead of time to get in because we can only fit so many cars in,” Graff explained. “The show is 100% full every time.” That email is info@highline-autos. com. Cars and Coffee was previously hosted at Scottsdale Fashion Square, Graff said. “High Street is kind of isolated more than the Scottsdale Fashion Square so there is more space,” Graff said. “They have a big parking garage for plenty of spectator parking and they are able to close off a whole street in the shopping center just for the show. So, it is a good fit.” Graff compares High Street to structures similar to those “built in Beverly Hills or something with all of the plants and the structures.” He calls it an overall “really nice facility that hosts the event.” The car selection changes depending on entrants. “We have a gentleman who is bringing an Aston Martin One-77, which the numbers are always great but there is supposedly only two or three of them in the United States,” Graff said. “It is like a car that most people would nev-
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Attendees can expect to see 400-plus exotic, classic and luxury cars from around the Valley at Highline Autos’ Cars and Coffee the first Saturday of each month. (Photo courtesy of Highline Autos) er get to see in their life. “We get Bugattis and JDMs, but that really depends on a person’s car taste. We’ll have first-generation Corvettes there and we will have for a lot of the younger crowd who is into the Nissan Skylines or the GT-Rs. It’s a wide variety of cars but they are all unique and special in their own way.” Owners are prohibited from revving or burnouts at the show, regardless of make and model, due to its proximity to residential areas, Graff said. Those who do that will be banned. “What you need to know is that you will want to arrive early because the show is usually in full swing by 7:30, even though that is the official starting time,” Graff said. Parking is available on the southwest side of the neighborhood. Restaurants around High Street, including The Boozy Breakfast and The Stir Coffee, are open for coffee and breakfast options. Cars and Coffee at High Street WHEN: 7:30 to 10 a.m., Saturday, April WHERE: High Street, 5415 E. High Street, Phoenix COST: Free INFO: highline-autos.com
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THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | MARCH 23, 2022
GET THE JOB
Asking Your Own Questions
It’s tempting to spend so much time prepping for questions which you may be asked in a job interview that you forget to ask your own. required. Ask what types of skills are missing on the current team that the new hire will be expected to possess. What’s the biggest challenge that someone in this position typically faces? Will the principal responsibilities evolve?
Of course, resumes should answer these questions, but hiring managers are not looking for facts and figures so much as how you present yourself in an interview setting. In other words, are you boastful or more of a leader, are you nervous in person or confident in your abilities?
WHAT TO SAY Try to frame your questions such that you’re also looking forward to long-range goals, and future career prospects. It’s easy to focus on the immediate things that need to be addressed, to the exclusion of biggerpicture projects that will ensure a lengthy tenure with your new employer. What sort of budget will you be working with, and is that set in stone? What training programs are available for professional development? What have prior hires done to be successful, and what promotion opportunities did they earn?
Asking the right questions, however, can bolster your candidacy as surely as any great answer. Here’s how achieve the perfect give and take:
Also, don’t forget to find out more about how you came to be sitting across from the hiring manager at this company. Don’t simply ask what experience is
But remember that timing is important, too. You can do all the right research, and even prepare the perfect query, but if you interrupt or
Employers are likely to make a series of tried-and-true queries to any potential job candidate: Why should we decide to hire you today? What unique experience do you bring to the table? What are your strengths as an employee – and your weaknesses?
TIMING YOUR QUESTIONS Posing a smart question shows that you’ve done your homework. Researching the company shows initiative, a genuine passion for their mission, and a flair for analytical thinking that is required for any leadership position.
talk over the hiring manager, it could be for naught. Your questions should also arrive within the natural flow of conversation, so that they do not sound rehearsed. At the same time, don’t wait until the end of the interview, where candidates are typically asked if they have any questions to add. Their minds may be made up by then.
THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | MARCH 23, 2022
We are hiring immediately for all skilled operator positions to be part of building our new, state of
JOIN OUR TEAM:
the art micro mill from the ground up.
• Forklift Operator
Ready for a challenge? We also have current
• Mechanic and Electrician
openings for our Modern Steelmaker Program,
• Production Operator • Technical Training Program
a 12-month rotational technical training program that teaches you everything you need to know about sustainable steelmaking. If you’re ready to grow in your career, you’re ready to join CMC. Visit us online to apply today!
JOBS
• Entry Level Positions
23
MetroPhoenix
Now Hiring in Mesa!
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THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | MARCH 23, 2022
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT • In-Office Position • Health, Dental, Vision, Paid Vacations, Holidays, 401K and more • Full-Time Times Media Group is a digital and print media company operating in the Phoenix, Tucson, and Los Angeles markets. We have experienced significant growth in recent years due to our commitment to excellence when it comes to providing news to the communities we serve.
Why Work Here? Times Media Group offers a positive work environment, employee training, a talented team, and lots of professional growth opportunities. Times Media Group is a digital and print media company operating in the Phoenix, Tucson, and Los Angeles markets. We have experienced significant growth in recent years due to our commitment to excellence when it comes to providing news to the communities we serve.
Job Description We are seeking a highly organized, friendly, and outgoing individual who excels at making customers happy and keeping the office environment functioning. A good candidate will have strong computer and communication skills and an ability to build rapport and communicate with customers, usually by phone.
A Good Candidate Possesses • An energetic and upbeat attitude • A minimum of two years of office experience • The ability to work well on a team • An ability to thrive in a fast-paced environment • Exceptional organizational skills • A desire for hands-on professional growth experience If you are a hardworking and resourceful individual, please respond with your resume and a cover letter outlining why you believe your skill set and experience make you a good fit for this position. We are currently scheduling interviews for an immediate opening. EOE
Apply today, upload your resume: TimesLocalMedia.com
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THE FOOTHILLS FOCUS | THEFOOTHILLSFOCUS.COM | MARCH 23, 2022
NOW HIRING FOR ALL POSITIONS*! Our famous pies and outdoor BBQ’s have made history, but old or new, history, hospitality and good food is what “The Rock” is all about
Lead Host and Assistant to the Manager Lead Pastry Baker Bussers - $15 – 20 per hour with tips Servers 25 – 30 per hour with tips (average)
$
Healthy Smiles is a fun General Dental Practice in Ahwatukee. The Doctor and team take pride in our work ethics, working together in a kind and caring environment. We are looking for a Dental Assistant that is self motivated, punctual, enjoys talking with patients.
Duties involve procedures that include removing teeth, root canals, implants, making temporary crowns, scan teeth with digital software, Greeting patients, preparing patients for treatment, discussing treatment, using Dentrix software to treatment plan schedule appointments, order supplies, maintain office inventory, take x-rays. Benefits: Dental, Vacation pay, Sick pay, 401(k) matching. Pay range based on skills, $20 - 25 per hour Apply today for this great opportunity, to learn and grow with our team.
Line Cooks – Flexible Hours *Signing CASH BONUS at the end of 30 days employment Rock Springs Café is located just 15 minutes north of Anthem – Exit 242. Equal Opportunity Employer.
azhealthysmiles.com • 480-759-2020
Submit resumes to: rockspringscafe@gmail.com
DEER VALLEY UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT JOB FAIR Visit www.careers.dvusd.org for all opportunities including special & general ed teachers, nurses, bus drivers, and custodians
Saturday, March 26th,9 a.m. - 12 p.m. 20402 N. 15th Avenue Phoenix, AZ 85027 R.S.V.P. judi.williams@dvusd.org
HIRING INSIDE SALES TEAM PLAYER IN TEMPE Times Media Group began in 1997 when founder Steve Strickbine left his job as a practicing CPA to pursue his dream of becoming a publishing entrepreneur. His fi rst venture was Valley Times, an 8-page publication with a circulation of 5,000 that served the North Scottsdale community. Two decades later, Times Media Group publishes a growing collection of more than 30 titles, from hyper-local and state-wide magazines to awardwinning newspapers and hightraffic websites. . It also owns and operates AZ Integrated Media, a distribution and custom publishing company.
Salary + Commission, Benefits, Vacation and Sick Time Times Media Group is the largest publisher of community news in Arizona. With a complete digital advertising suite and over 300,000 copies a week – our reach is a must-have for local businesses, and we offer advertising solutions to fit any business in any community! We are hiring inside advertising sales representatives to help with inbound and outbound sales. TMG has grown 500% in the past six years, and we expect this growth trajectory to continue. Come join us! Do you get excited when you sell? We get it - it’s exciting to sell! Do you have an interest in selling solutions and not just ads? If you are a fast learner, tech savvy and familiar with Google and other digital advertising solutions, you should contact us. If you want to learn how, we have you covered too! Will train. This is a full time job with the hours of 8:30-5pm Mon-Fri. in Tempe near the Broadway Curve. Need we say more? Contact us TODAY!
Please send your resume and cover letter to:
EOE
Elaine Cota, ecota@timespublications.com
JOBS
JOIN THE DVUSD T E A M T O D AY !
MetroPhoenix
The legendary Rock Springs Café is
Western Milling in Buckeye is looking for a full-time machine operator as well as other positions (general labor) Forklift experience is a plus. Full benefitpackage offered along with 401K. We are an ESOP em-ployer. Candidates are welcome to apply online at careers-westernmilling.icims.com Walk ups are also welcome. Apply at 29700 W Lower River Road, Buckeye, AZ 85326. 602-251-3600
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Ahwatukee Chandler Gilbert Glendale Mesa North Valley Ocotillo Peoria Phoenix Scottsdale Tempe West Valley
MetroPhoenixClassifieds com To Advertise Call: 480-898-6465 or email Class@TimesPublications.com Employment General
Commerical/ Industrial/Retail
Needed: Horse Wrangler. Must be able to drive a truck and pull a horse trailer. Also, Need someone to do pony parties. Call 602-316-3360
Affordable Anthem Executive Office Suite for Lease in Gateway Office Park. Incl: Internet, util, alarmed. 623-696-8670
Auto - All Makes FOR SALE 2009 Mercedes ML 350 4Matic. $11,950. 104,750 miles. Excellent condition. Beige leather seats. Beige interior. Clean. All Maintenance. Towing Hitch. 602 448 1776
Meetings/Events Alanon meeting : New River Serenity Thursday nights 7P Desert Hills Comm Church, 34835 N. 7th St. 85086 newriverserenity.com
MISSED THE DEADLINE? Place your ad online!
Air Conditioning/Heating
FEEL THE
Comfort
YOU’VE BEEN
Missing!
602-789-3000 info@azperfectcomfort.com www.azperfectcomfort.com
Landscape Design/Installation
Glass/Mirror • Custom Glass • Shower Doors & Enclosures • Window Glass Replacement • Custom Mirrors • Glass Table Tops & Shelves
Affordable! • We Spread Rock • Sprinkler Repair • Same Day Service
Come and visit our custom glass showroom behind the Dairy Queen in Cave Creek.
480-235-6101
www.aboveandbeyondglass.com ROC 233846 & ROC 236899
JOE 480-703-6686 Serving Cave Creek for 40 years
wZ Desert Care AIrrigation ROC#215280
VETERAN OWNED & OPERATED • ROC#300933 • BONDED & INSURED
HEATING • COOLING • INDOOR AIR QUALITY
Call 480-898-6465
Drywall
DONALDSON DRYWALL Cave creek Resident Since 1984 • Water Damage • TV Niche Changes • Texture Match • Repairs/Remodels • New construction
FREE ESTIMATES
Irrigation
& Landscape est. 2002 ~ Anthem, Arizona
Install • Repair • Replace
623-203-7717
KIB EXCAVATING Your Septic System Experts
Complete Septic Systems • Conventional & Alternative and Repairs
Engineered Pads • Site Prep • Grading • Hard Digs Utilities • Trucking/Hauling • Driveways (Gravel, Dirt and Rock)
Mobile
Licensed • Bonded • Insured COMMERCIAL/RESIDENTIAL
602.319.1089
Meetings/Events?
Get Free notices in the Classifieds!
Submit to ecota@timespublications.com
480-861-1375
Family Owned & Operated
Licensed Bonded Insured ROC #289594
Sprinkler Repair Landscaping & More!
See MORE Ads Online!
www.TheFoothillsFocus.com
• Affordable Same Day Service • Dependable • Guaranteed • 12 Years Experience
No Job Too Big or Small
602-330-6965
Residential & Commercial
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Landscape/Maintenance
North Valley Landscaping Quality you deserve for a great price you can afford.
✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔
Yard Clean-ups Maintenance Tree trimming Water features Irrigation / Repair
Plumbing
Plumbing
Drain Cleaning Experts, water heaters, disposals, water & sewer lines repaired/replaced & remodels. Rapid Response. If water runs through it we do it! 602-663-8432
Wyman Plumbing. Your friendly neighborhood plumber for the NORTH PHX area! We can quote most jobs over the phone! 623-551-6688 ROC License #309216 Book Online at wyman-services.com
Roofing
Tax Services
Almeida Roofing Inc.
NORTHRIDGE TAX & ACCOUNTING
All Types of Roofing
PREPARATION
602-743-3175
480-388-9442
35+ years experience Specializing in IRS problems
Roofing
IRS Enrolled Agent
Free Estimates & Inspections • Tile • Shingles Foam • Coatings • Modified Bitumen • New Roof Repairs • Reroofs
Personal & Business
• • • •
Anthem Plaza 42302 N.Vision Way, #113, Anthem, AZ
Clean, Prompt, Friendly and Professional Service
(Just South of Walmart)
FREE ESTIMATES
623-551-0552
Tiles & Shingles sunlandroofingllc@gmail.com Installation Repair Re-Roofing
602-471-2346
CALL CLASSIFIEDS
480-898-6465
DUKES EXCAVATING
We'll Get Your Phone to Ring! We Accept:
SEPTIC SYSTEMS ◆ COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL CONVENTIONAL, ALTERNATIVE SEWER, STORM DRAIN & RETENTION SITE DEVELOPMENT ◆ UTILITIES
COMMERCIAL RESIDENTAL COMMERCIAL && RESIDENTIAL
We Got You Covered!
ROC KA 302118 General Contractor JIM DUKES
623.606.8411
COMMERCIAL AND RESIDENTIAL
Specializing in New, Tile and Shingle Roofs • Repairs New Roofs, Repairs, Roof, & Coatings •FlatCoatings, Roof HotFlat Mopping Hot Mopping & Patching Patching •Total Rubber Roof Systems & Total Rubber Roof Systems
FREE ESTIMATES • 623-465-2546
PREMIER LANDSCAPING & GARDENING
ROOFING LLC
We Got You Covered!
515 E. Carefree Hwy, #44, Phoenix, AZ 85085 dukesexcavatinginc@gmail.com
• Custom Design • Water Feature • Container/Pot Gardens • Fireplaces & BBQs • Patio & Walls • Irrigation Specialists • Tree Trim/Removal • Bi-weekly/Monthly
PHILLIPS Family Owned and Operated 43 Years Experience in Arizona
Same Day Service All Work Guaranteed
623-873-1626
FREE Estimates SAME DAY SERVICE
602-551-2255 30 Years Experience
Licensed, Bonded & Insured • ROC #166390
ROC#288-123 • Licensed • Bonded • Insured
We Pay Your Insurance Deductible
Free Estimates Monday through Saturday Licensed 2006 ROC 223367 Bonded Insured
Licensed Bonded Insured ROC 288-123
Senior & Military Discounts CALL CLASSIFIEDS
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602-551-2255
PhillipsRoofing.org PhillipsRoofing@cox.net
Email Your Job Post to: class@times publications.com
898-6465
www.almeidaroofing.com
Serving All Types of Roofing:
People are looking in the Classifieds Every day!
or Call 480
Licensed • Bonded • Insured • ROC #215758 Backhoe • Hammer Hoe • Grade Tractor 1,000 Gallon Water Wagon • Dump Trailer Septic Install & Repair (Lic. #276732) Tree Brush and Cactus Removal Road/Driveway Repair & Maintenance Utility Trenching & Plumbing Construction Cleanup Material Screening
???
Former IRS Auditor
FREE ESTIMATES! Call Brian
TAX
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It Only Takes Seconds to Drown. Always watch your child around water.
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